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How to find dispersed campsites in national forests

By Bob Difley

RVers and normal people call camping without hookups boondocking, regardless of whether it is on the baking black asphalt in a Walmart parking lot or so far back an old forest service logging road even the coyotes can’t find it.

But you rarely see a magazine ad photo of that sparkling new 40-foot diesel pusher in a Walmart parking lot. So if what you see in the RV ad–a canopy of lofty pine trees on the edge of a wildflower strewn meadow with a gurgling mountain stream flowing through it–looks like the campsite you picture your RV in, then I have news for you. You’re going to have to discover it for yourself, because it won’t be in a Walmart parking lot and it won’t be in a campground either.

Those campsites are called “dispersed” by the Forest Service and BLM, which is a good word for them. They are scattered about, with no directional signs leading you to them, sometimes no room for more than one or two vehicles, not identified in any printed directions, nor located on official maps. They are the best kept secrets of boondockers that have taken the time and effort to find them. So how do you find them?

It is not usually efficient to find a one night free boondock stopover while enroute to a destination, but rather when you have a few days or longer to stay in one place, and are willing to take some extra time to find just the right campsite. One of these options below will work, depending on your and the area’s circumstances, and how much time you have to look.

Over time you will find lots of dispersed campsites. Record them all on your GPS or in a camping log book complete with coordinates, directions, mileage markers, visual signs, and landmarks, so that you can find them again. Your favorite one might be taken, but with backups you can just choose another one. And, you also then have something to share, and can swap dispersed campsite information with other boondockers. And remember–leave your campsite cleaner than you found it.

Check out our Healthy RV Lifestyle website for more RV stuff and my ebooks, BOONDOCKING: Finding the Perfect Campsite on America’s Public Lands, and 111 Ways to get the Biggest Bang for your RV Lifestyle Buck.

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